The news of Teach and Vane's impromptu…
October 1718 CE
The news of Teach and Vane's impromptu party, as it spreads throughout the neighboring colonies, worries the Governor of Pennsylvania enough to send out two sloops to capture the pirates.
They are unsuccessful.
Governor Spotswood had meanwhile learned that William Howard, the former quartermaster of Queen Anne's Revenge, is in the area.
Believing that he might know of Teach's whereabouts, he has had the pirate and his two slaves arrested.
Spotswood has no legal authority to have pirates tried, and as a result, Howard's attorney, John Holloway, brings charges against Captain Brand of HMS Lyme, where Howard is imprisoned.
He also sues on Howard's behalf for damages of five hundred pounds, claiming wrongful arrest.
Spotswood's council claims that Teach's presence is a crisis and that under a statute of William III, the governor is entitled to try Howard without a jury.
The charges refer to several acts of piracy supposedly committed after the pardon's cutoff date, in "a sloop belonging to ye subjects of the King of Spain", but ignored the fact that they had taken place outside Spotswood's jurisdiction and in a vessel then legally owned.
Another charge cites two attacks, one of which is the capture of a slave ship off Charleston Bar, from which one of Howard's slaves is presumed to have come.
Howard is sent to await trial before a Court of Vice-Admiralty, on the charge of piracy, but Brand and his colleague, Captain Gordon (of HMS Pearl) refuse to serve with Holloway present.
Incensed, Holloway has no option but to stand down, and is replaced by the Attorney General of Virginia, John Clayton, who Spotswood describes as "an honester man [than Holloway]". (Lee, Robert E. (1974), Blackbeard the Pirate (2002 ed.), North Carolina: John F. Blair.)
Howard is found guilty and sentenced to be hanged, but is saved by a commission from London, which directs Spotswood to pardon all acts of piracy committed by surrendering pirates before July 23, 1718.